The Biden administration accused Russia on Wednesday of a wide-ranging and sophisticated effort to disrupt U.S. politics with misinformation crafted in Moscow and injected into the American discourse through unwitting American social media “influencers.”
Attorney General Merrick Garland said the operation reached Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “inner circle” of advisers and was intended to sway American voters to undermine support for Ukraine and deliver pro-Russian outcomes in the 2024 elections.
Russian operatives set up bogus websites mimicking real American outlets to spread pro-Russian views and targeted advertising on social media and then used “bot networks” to monitor Americans’ reactions to determine which messages worked best.
The operation was designed to take advantage of the fraught moment in American politics by appealing to social media users. This lends credence to propaganda posts with phrases such as “the official media will never tell you about it.”
The FBI seized nearly three dozen internet domains, federal prosecutors brought charges against two media executives and the Treasury Department froze assets of 10 people and two Russian outfits that federal officials say were involved in the covert operation.
The State Department said it is offering a $10 million bounty for information on a Russian operation known as RaHDit or Russian Angry Hackers Did It. The department said it would slap travel visa sanctions on some of those involved in the Russian effort but could not disclose the targets publicly because of privacy rules.
Several Russian media outlets were also designated as foreign missions, meaning they must report to the U.S. on the activities of their personnel.
“The American people are entitled to know when a foreign power engages in political activities or seeks to influence public discourse,” Mr. Garland said Wednesday.
At the White House, spokesman John Kirby said the effort was designed to spread disinformation and sow discord. He declined reporters’ prods to say Moscow was trying to boost the campaign of former President Donald Trump at the expense of Vice President Kamala Harris.
He contrasted that with Iran, which the U.S. last month accused of election interference by attempting to hack communications of Mr. Trump’s campaign.
Mr. Kirby urged Americans to resist the foreign efforts to sway the election.
“Not just the federal government, but everybody needs to be concerned about this and everybody needs to bear a hand in pushing back on the influence attempts by Russia,” he said.
The Justice Department announced charges against two employees of RT, formerly Russia Today, a media outlet that the U.S. says is run by Moscow.
RT was chased out of the U.S. market after Russia invaded Ukraine in early 2022, but the Biden administration said it found its way back using an intermediary company that duped American entities into spreading Russian messages.
A federal grand jury in New York charged Kostiantyn Kalashnikov and Elena Afanasyeva with money laundering and conspiracy to violate the Foreign Agents Registration Act. Prosecutors said they spent nearly $10 million to have a Tennessee-based company distribute Russian videos through TikTok, Instagram, X and YouTube.
Prosecutors said the company made nearly 2,000 videos garnering more than 16 million views on YouTube covering “immigration, inflation and other topics related to domestic and foreign policy.” RT’s role in producing them wasn’t disclosed.
Prosecutors said RT also duped two “online commentators,” whom the indictment didn’t name, into spreading Russian information to their respective 2.4 million and 1.3 million YouTube subscribers. When the U.S. entities asked for information about who was funding them, the RT operatives fabricated a persona, Eduard Grigoriann.
When asked about news of the federal government’s actions Wednesday, RT told NBC News: “1. Ha! 2. Hahahaha! 3. HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.”
“Three things are certain in life: death, taxes and RT’s interference in the US elections,” RT said.
The RT operation was one part of the larger effort, prosecutors said.
They said Russian operatives also set up websites that mimicked popular American news sites, such as Fox News or Forward, but spread Moscow’s propaganda.
In one example cited in court documents, the operation created a website at washingtonpost.pm, using actual logos and styles of The Washington Post. The website included real journalists’ names and photos and external links to stories on legitimate news sites.
The articles presented under the real reporters’ names were fake propaganda, the FBI said. One piece said: “It is time for our leaders to recognize that continued support for Ukraine is a mistake. It was a waste of lives and money, and to claim otherwise only means further destruction. For the sake of everyone involved in the conflict, the Biden administration should just make a peace agreement and move on.”
Top Russian officials consistently deny they are trying to influence or undermine the U.S. election. They say the accusations are a ploy by American politicians to attract more votes.
“I don’t know what they expect to achieve, but we can see that they consider their tough attitude towards Russia to be an additional talking point in the fight for votes, based on the idea of American exceptionalism, which makes them believe that they can do whatever they please and no one will dare touch them,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said in an interview posted on the messaging app Telegram.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has said Moscow favored President Biden’s reelection because he was “more predictable” than Mr. Trump in office.
With Mr. Biden out of the race, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov was asked this week whether Russia’s allegiances had shifted, with Ms. Harris now the Democratic nominee.
“We have no candidate,” Mr. Peskov replied with a laugh in a separate Telegram interview. “But, of course, the Democrats are more predictable. And what Putin said about Biden’s predictability applies to almost all Democrats, including Ms. Harris.”
Russian attempts to meddle in U.S. elections have made headlines since 2016, when Democrats wrongly accused candidate Donald Trump of “colluding” with Russia.
That focus obscured what intelligence officials said was a real effort to sow dissension within the U.S. by picking at scabs on the American political psyche from across the ideological spectrum.
“The playbook for authoritarian regimes in today’s world is to try to sow divisiveness and discord, to turn us against each other, to capitalize on existing social tensions,” FBI Director Christopher A. Wray testified to Congress earlier this summer.
He said Iran and China are active alongside Russia in those efforts.
Chinese operatives were spreading narratives trying to downplay the theory that the coronavirus leaked from a Chinese lab. They also fueled narratives against law enforcement, Mr. Wray testified.
Mr. Garland on Wednesday said all three nations remain under suspicion.
“We will be relentlessly aggressive in countering and disrupting attempts by Russia and Iran as well as China or any other foreign malign actor to interfere in our elections and undermine our democracy,” he said.
• David R. Sands contributed to this report.
• Stephen Dinan can be reached at sdinan@washingtontimes.com.
• Mallory Wilson can be reached at mwilson@washingtontimes.com.
Please read our comment policy before commenting.